V-thread ice anchors are an easy, secure and inexpensive rappel anchor for ice
climbing. In this article I will describe how to make the anchor, how to use it,
what kind of gear is needed, and how to make your own tool. Everything about V-threading
is easy and they have become popular at ice crags all over the world.

A V-Thread is a tunnel cut into the ice and treaded with a sling; sort of like
a fully enclosed ice bollard. They are are sometimes called Abalakov anchors,
after the famous Russian mountaineer Vitaly Abalakov who first made them. He is
also known for inventing the first nuts with cammed faces that inspired the tri-cam
design. In between bagging many peaks in the (former) USSR he inspired the cliché
of Russian garage-made gear with his designs for special haul pulleys, titanium
screws, and adjustable tube chocks.

Happy Hooking...
Jamie Leef

And here’s a link to our video to make learning the process even easier. We hope you enjoy it.

The first step is to find some good ice. Any ice anchor is only as good as the ice into which it is
placed, so you should investigate the condition of the ice as you would with any
screw placement. Dig into or clear away poor quality surface ice if you need to.

Sink a long (22 cm) screw to the hilt at a 45 to 60 degree angle horizontally
to the ice (pointing left or right, not up or down). I like 45 degrees, but some
sources claim 60 is better. Then back the screw out, as much as half-way.

Take another screw and drill a mirror image hole, using the first screw to sight
an intersection as deep into the ice as you can get. You can make the thread with
one screw if you put your hooking tool in the first hole as a sighting guide.

Remove at least one of the screws. Feed a length of sling into one hole and hook
it through the other with your Abalakov hook tool (see below). If you missed,
and the holes did not meet, find another spot a few feet away and try again.

DO NOT reuse any of the same holes!

Pull the sling through.

If you have threaded a loop or a sling, clip it. Most often you thread a single strand, so
tie the ends together using a water knot, being sure to leave a good tail.

Tread your rope through the sling. Be sure to back up your new thread with an
ice screw while you test the anchor or the first person is rapping. Smile and
toss back another cold one. You're an ice master!

Food For Thought: My personal experience is that ice is less strong when
it has holes or pick placements that line up horizontally. I believe this is one
origin of the standard advice to stagger your ice tools while climbing. So I try
to stagger one v-thread hole above the next. This is not currently orthodox, so
you might want to wait until more thorough tests are done before trying it this
way.

Making aV-thread Tool

This is real easy and way cheap. If you are a homemade climbing gear nerd like
me, you might even have all the materials you need in the bins of scrap gear strewn
across your living room/climbing-wall-room/gear storage area. First bend a tiny
loop into one end of a 13" length of coat hanger. Bend a roughly 1"
diameter loop into the other end. The result should be just a bit longer than
a 22cm ice screw. Tie some thin shock cord onto a 2 inch length of 1/2" I.D.
clear flexible tubing. This works best if the cord goes into the tube, exits via
a small hole about in the middle, and then goes back through a pair of holes at
the end (see drawing). Tie the cord to the handle of the tool so that the tubing
is tensioned a bit when it is slipped over the hook. Wrap the handle loop and
cord knot with duct tape. Voila, your own V-Thread hooking tool. Vitaly would
be proud of you.

Using Abalakovs:
Back the thread up with a good screw placement, test it with a bounce or two,
and leave the backup in until the first person who raps has had a chance to clip
a new anchor below. On the popular lines at Lake Willoughby at the end of most
seasons, you can look 80 feet in just about any direction and find a resident
v-thread. It looks like the place has been grid-bolted! Resident v-threads are likely
to be safe to use if they look as good as a freshly placed one. Use your own judgement
and if in doubt place a new one. Remember that v-threads are cheap, your life
isn't!

Beware: there has been at least one fatal accident involving reuse of an existing
thread. Several years ago in the Canadian Rockies a climber died when he mistakenly clipped
a long tail of a v-thread runner that had frozen into the ice, instead of clipping
the main loop. He would likely have survived if he had backed up with a screw.

There is one potential environmental drawback to the V-Thread's popularity - they
end up on the ground in the spring. So if you place them, think about touring
your local ice crag in the late spring and doing a cleanup.

Can I belay off them?
Well, the jury is still out. They have been extensively and successfully field
tested as rappel anchors. A few years ago Mark Twight cited a University of Calgary strength test
where V-Threads supported loads between 15 and 20 KN in good dry ice. This is
certainly as good as most other points in a belay chain (small wired nuts can
be rated as low as 4 KN!). I have not been able to review this test report though,
and I have not found any other research or qualified opinion that questions or
supports belaying off a thread.

Intuitively, I think I would trust a tread because studies of ice screw failure
often show that the metal tubes of the screw fail before the ice into which they
are placed fails. Many guides and ice climbing instructors like Jeff Lowe and
Will Gadd suggest slinging icicles as pro. But until some more serious and scientific
tests are conducted, I can not recommend them as points of protection. Whatever
you do on lead must be a personal decision.

The Gear:
Several companies sell hooking tools for making v-threads. It is pretty darn easy
to make a good one yourself, and in the next section I will describe how to do
just that. But here are my reviews of the ready-mades. They all cost about $10.
Besides a tool, hang a couple two foot to three foot lengths of you favorite color
9/16 supertape on a 'biner, and you are all set.

The Simond (or Braun) Abalahook is a steel cable with a swadged loop on one end
(like a wire nut) and a hook on the other. It is flexible, which can be a pain
to use in a deep hole. Its rubber protective cap (for the hook) can easily ride
up the cable, exposing the hook to your new Gore-tex.

The Charlet Moser MultiHook is a swank solid metal job, so you can also use it
to clean out ice-packed screws. It does include a useless hex nut wrench (that's
the Multi in MultiHook).

Grivel's V-anchor Hook is a cheap scrap of wire without a protective cap. Not
even funny! Send me $10 and I will give you my cheap scraps of old wire!

References:"Mechanical Advantage" by John
Middendorf. A fascinating history of climbing gear development, including
Vitaly Abalakov's accomplishments.

"Ice Climbing Anchor Strength" by George McEwan of UKClimbing.com. George takes a look at a study of ice anchors
and explores the findings. Just how strong are abolokov threads and re-bored ice screws?
Here’s the article.

"Myths, Cautions, and Techniques of Ice Screw Placement" by Chris Harmston
of Black Diamond Equipment. This is the research that taught us to place ice screws
pointing down rather than up. Chris is always a great read, and this is the
crucial article.

"Accidents in North American Mountaineering" from the American Alpine
Club. Learn from those who blow it.